Monday 20 October 2008

Portable Antiquities Scheme Review

The MLA page on the Portable Antiquities Scheme is now supplied with a hyperlink at the bottom which says ‘A stable future for treasures from the past is at the heart of Portable Antiquities Scheme review’ but it leads at the moment to an empty page . The title is a bit ominous, as of course the PAS was set up to deal with items which do not fall under the 1996 Treasure Act. What is going on?

This review was supposed to be commissioned in May, it seems to have only been bugun in June, it was supposed to be written by “September” and here we are at the end of October awaiting the results. The 2008 review was supposed to look at:

1. The objectives of the scheme in the light of changes in regional museum provision, most particularly the Renaissance
programme
2. Options for levels of activity and funding
3. How the scheme can be delivered in the future in the most cost-efficient manner
4. How the scheme can be funded and managed in the future in a sustainable way.
Well, let us see what conclusions the working party has come to, especially on the fundamental fourth point – which looks remarkably like the PAS’ own “fifth aim” formulated in 2003 which it announced in its annual report two years ago that it had already fulfilled. Apparently not.

I find the term "options for levels of activity" a bit irritating. If this Scheme is to function at all, surely it needs to do so at a "level of activity" adequate to the task of recording the finds made by as large a proportion of the British public as possible, otherwise this is information about the past which is being lost. Since at the moment, the Scheme is only reaching a fraction (though opinions differ on "how large/small" a fraction) of the British public who are finders of potentially important achaeological evidence, the only acceptable answer to the question of "levels of activity" must from a heritage management point of view be "more effective than at present".Half measures are of little help to anyone, introducing an element of bias in the record which makes the whole unreliable as a source of information about the historic environment. It merely becomes a public-relations exercise rather than a meaningful resource.

Perhaps it would aid cost efectiveness if in addition to having an outreach scheme, reporting of finds - whether accidental or not - was made compulsory, as it is in many other countries (and is in the case of other sorts of things found by members of the public - such as human remains).

2 comments:

David Gill said...

The page is empty because the code on the mla site is wrong. It should be:
http://www.mla.gov.uk/programmes/portant/review

The page then reads:

A stable future for treasures from the past is at the heart of the Portable Antiquities Scheme review

The MLA has commissioned a review of the Portable Antiquities Scheme. The scheme was established in 1997 to encourage the voluntary recording of archaeological objects found by the public in England and Wales.

The aim of the review will be to ensure the scheme is as effective as possible and look at:

* Objectives of the scheme in the light of changes in regional museum provision
* Options for levels of activity and funding
* How the scheme can be delivered in the future in the most cost-efficient manner
* How the scheme can be funded and managed in the future in a sustainable way

A steering group with representatives from MLA, British Museum and the Department for Culture, Media and Sport will oversee the review. Kate Clark an experienced heritage consultant has been commissioned to undertake the review. The review has been asked to identify options and recommendations by September 2008.

Paul Barford said...

Thanks David, and there's me getting all excited thinking that they'd prepared a blank page for the imminent publication of the Review... how disappointing.

 
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